March Private Sector PMIs out of the Eurozone, the UK and the US in Focus

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

It was a busier start to the day on the Asian economic calendar this morning. The Japanese Yen was in focus, with prelim private sector PMI numbers for March in focus.

Outside of the numbers, updates on the coronavirus and government action, or in some cases, inaction, were the key drivers. The U.S failure to push through the Coronavirus Bill on Monday continued to weigh on the dollar going into the Asian session.

While inaction from Capitol Hill weighed on the Dollar, however, there was support for riskier assets from the FED’s latest move. On Monday, the FED pledged asset purchases without limit along with a move into corporate bonds. The FED also pledged a $300bn program to support credit flows to businesses and further credit support for large companies.

For the Japanese Yen

The prelim March Manufacturing PMI fell from 47.8 to 44.8, with the Services PMI falling from 46.8 to 32.7.

According to the March Markit Survey,

Manufacturing Sector

  • The manufacturing sector saw its sharpest contraction since April 2009.

  • Production slumped at its fastest pace since the wake of the 2011 Tsunami.

  • Low orders from home and abroad led to the demand for goods falling at the steepest rate in 11-years.

  • Employment fell in March, reversing a pickup in hiring in February.

Services Sector

  • It was the lowest reading for the services sector since data collection began in Sept-07.

  • New business intakes came to a standstill, with the spread of the coronavirus also leading to cancellations of orders.

  • Firms also cut headcounts, with employment falling at the sharpest pace since Oct-15.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥110.762 to ¥110.684 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Japanese Yen was up by 0.56% to ¥110.61 against the U.S Dollar.

Elsewhere

The Aussie Dollar was down by 0.94% to $0.5893, with the Kiwi Dollar also up by 0.94% to $0.5774.

A lack of stats for the Aussie Dollar brought Markit Survey March private PMIs into focus that would normally be brushed aside.

While service sector activity took a hit in March as a result of containment measures to tackle the virus, the manufacturing sector returned to expansion.

According to prelim figures, the Manufacturing PMI rose from 49.8 to 50.1, while the Services PMI slid from 48.4 to 39.8.

While that’s good news from the manufacturing sector, it’s bad news from an RBA perspective. The RBA continues to rely on consumer spending and a marked contraction in service sector activity doesn’t bode well.

In the equity markets, the ASX200 was up by 2.26%, with the Nikkei up by 4.6% in early trading. The HK and China markets had yet to open.